A ROGUES' gallery of seven youngsters serving Anti-Social Behaviour Orders has been sent to 2,500 Birmingham homes.

A ROGUES' gallery of seven youngsters serving Anti-Social Behaviour Orders has been sent to 2,500 Birmingham homes.

The seven teenagers, convicted of violence, intimidation and vandalism on the streets of Kingstanding, were first exposed in April this year after the Mail campaigned for them to be named and shamed.

They now feature in a leaflet published by the West Midlands Police and Birmingham City Council.

It shows photographs of the seven, their names, ages and a list of their ASBO conditions including curfews and bans from associating with each other, harassing members of the community and entering the Warren Farm Road area of Kingstanding.

The gang was found guilty of a racist harassment, aggressive and abusive behaviour, extortion of money from pensioners, assault and acts of vandalism.

Now families who receive the leaflet are being asked to look out for the gang and report them to police if they breach their ASBOs.

Ian McGibbon, of Birmingham Anti-Social Behaviour Unit, said: "Distributing leaflets will discourage them from breaching the Anti-social Behaviour Orders and enable local people to report them if they do."

The Unit has secured 16 interim ASBOs, leading to 13 full orders, in the Kingstanding area over the last 12 months.

Mr McGibbon said that this has led to a reduction of anti-social behaviour across Kingstanding, particularly in the Warren Farm Road area.